This storyline will follow the events of Sinestro Corps War and the fallout of the War of Light. Green Lantern Vol. Read War of the Green Lanterns here. Green Lantern omnibus by Geoff Johns Book 2 – Collects Green Lantern #26-52, Blackest Night #0-7, DC Universe #0, Untold Tales of Blackest Night #1-2, Blackest Night Tales of the Corps #1-2. Could be that I'm just burned out on Blackest Night, but this one seemed a little on the cheesy side. If you're reading the trade, just read the individual trades completely and don't switch between books. If it is any help I have green lantern secret origins and the hardcover blackest night. I read all the reviews prior to embarking on this epic read reading Blackest Night (BN) and Blackest Night Green Lantern (GL43-52) simultaneously in the order they were published: basically BN0-BN6 switching back and forth with GL43-49 followed by GL50-51, BN7, GL 52 and finally concluding in BN8. I recall Greg Rucka speaking highly of him so I knew that was enough of an endorsement for me.

Without spoiling anything (even if it is 6 years old) Lanterns die, fight, get resurrected, fight, turn into Red Lanterns, fight, fall in love, fight, and finally stand up for themselves. Green Lantern Vol. After reading the other two Blackest Night books, I went back and looked at this one and it make a little more sense. Patrick Gleason, who is often overshadowed by his more prominent fellow artists on the GL titles turns in some of his strongest work here. It has far too much action to effectively communicate the situation in the different areas. What doesn't work here are the members of the Indigo Tribe, Mogo (once a fun supporting character now seemingly a deus ex machina piece), Miri, and the screwing with Guy Gardenr's character (why make him a ticking time bomb?). Welcome back. No, it wasn't bad, just... lackluster. This was one of the best Blackest Night graphic novels I've read. This deals more with the Green Lantern Corps as a whole, and tells stories about everyone from John Stewart to Kyle Rayner to Kilowog, to Guy Gardiner, to Mogo the planet and Salaak. - Blackest Night #0 (continues in Blackest Night!) This means that instead of a trade containing one full story, it contained one part of the story, forcing you to go into another trade to continue the story. The majority of the story is a huge, stellar fight scene. Green Lantern Blackest Night Reading Order. There are no discussion topics on this book yet.

Read Blackest Night here. I liked it because it was a great read and kept my attention throughout the whole book. I read this one first and that was kind of a mistake since I didn't know what was going on for some time, and it seems like the middle of the book is just one long fight scene after another that I didn't understand. Instead of putting the full story in contained volumes, they simply made trades out of each individual mini-series or comic with a Blackest Night tie-in. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. I think i will stop here because i hear you don't have to read all of them and the first 3 are the relevant ones. this was a great book I have read a few of the green lantern book and that were really good this one was graphic but not as much. Here's a link to a list of the correct reading order.

Blackest Night - Tales of the Corps #1. When I recently reviewed the DC "event" book. This process takes no more than a few hours and we'll I haven't read much Lantern stuff, and this made me interested enough in some characters that I would like to read more. A classic. Patrick Gleason, who is often overshadowed by his more prominent fellow artists on the GL titles turns in some of his strongest work here. Not only on Green Lantern Corps, but they're also killing it on Batman and Robin right now. Reading the Green Lantern Blackest Night and Blackest Night 0-8 was sufficient for me, nothing new here.

Refresh and try again. Another tie-in with Blackest Night, this one might be the most relevant after Green Lantern. This is one I would love to own. This is a decent tie in to an incredible series. After reading the other two Blackest Night books, I went back and looked at this one and it make a little more sense.